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  1. King Arthur (22450 bytes)
    2: [[Image:Arthur3487.jpg|right|framed|Victorian image of '''King Arthur''' in plate...
    7: Some members of this school, most notably Geoffrey Ashe and Leon Fleuriot, have argued for identif...
    19: ..., chief giver of feasts, with his tall blades red from the battle which all men remember."
    25: ...r's soldiers; Arthur was awarded a herd of cattle from Cadoc as [[wergeld]] for his men; Cadoc deliver...
    29: ...tury]] at Cadbury Castle, and in several parts of France.
  2. Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
    1: ...ntury|18th]] and early [[19th century]] resulting from the replacement of an economy based on manual l...
    3: ... merged into the [[Second Industrial Revolution]] from about [[1850]], when technological and economic...
    7: ...erm industrial ''revolution'' was introduced by [[Friedrich Engels]] and [[Louis-Auguste Blanqui]] in ...
    10: ...itain. The steam engine was created to pump water from coal mines, enabling them to be deepened]]effic...
    12: ... occurred in Britain. In other nations, such as [[France]], markets were split up by local regions, wh...
  3. Abduction (508 bytes)
    2: ...logy]], abduction is the moving of [[limb]]s away from the midline of the [[body]]; see [[anatomical t...
    3: ...to [[kidnapping]] but sometimes specially used in relation to a [[woman]] or [[child]].
  4. Elizabeth of Russia (14144 bytes)
    9: ... these languages with more fluency than accuracy. From her earliest years she delighted every one by h...
    11: ... her beloved sister Anne, her only remaining near relation, the princess found herself at the age of eightee...
    13: ...d her fathers sensual temperament and, being free from all control, abandoned herself to her appetites...
    19: ... seems to have been first suggested to her by the French ambassador, La Chetardie, who was plotting to...
    23: ...the 6th of December [[1741]], with a few personal friends, including her physician, Armand Lestocq, he...
  5. Elizabeth I of England (34338 bytes)
    7: ...ngland]] and [[King of Ireland|Queen of Ireland]] from [[17 November]] [[1558]] until her death. Somet...
    9: ...th impatience by her counsellors, often saved her from political and marital misalliances. Like her fa...
    11: ...the number of [[Privy Council|Privy Counsellors]] from thirty-nine to nineteen, and later to fourteen.
    16: ...as addressed as Lady Elizabeth and lived in exile from her father as he married his succession of wive...
    18: ...th Elizabeth and remained her confidante and good friend for life. She had been appointed to Elizabeth...
  6. Marguerite Duras (1799 bytes)
    5: ...[[Gia Dinh]], [[French Indochina]], and went to [[France]], her parents' native country, to study law,...
    7: ...''. She was also the screenwriter of the [[1959]] French film ''[[Hiroshima mon amour]]'', which was d...
    9: ...e to, rather than tell, a story over images whose relation to what is said may be more-or-less tangential.
  7. Artemisia Gentileschi (23093 bytes)
    7: ...Since her father's style took heavily inspiration from [[Caravaggio]] during that period, her style wa...
    18: ... marry [[Pierantonio Stiattesi]], a modest artist from [[Florence]]. Shortly afterwards the couple mov...
    24: ...ally of the Granduchess Cristina. She was in good relationship with [[Galileo Galilei]] with whom she reimai...
    26: ...was rising. The success and the fashion radiating from her figure fueled many voices about her private...
    28: From this period we remember the [[La Conversione de...
  8. Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
    1: ...t and literature, who spent most of her life in [[France]].
    7: ...r, she was educated in [[California]], graduating from [[Radcliffe College]] in 1897 followed by two y...
    11: In 1902 she moved to [[France]] during the height of artistic creativity ga...
    12: From 1903 to 1912 she lived in [[Paris]] with her br...
    13: ... her whole life, Stein was supported by a stipend from her brother Michael's business.
  9. Krystyna Skarbek (11133 bytes)
    3: ...s in [[Germany|German-occupied]] [[Poland]] and [[France]]. She was the longest-serving and most capa...
    7: ...]]), and the couple soon moved to [[British East Africa]].
    9: ...vinced by her acquaintances, including journalist Frederick Voigt. She left for [[Hungary]], where in...
    11: ...].) Krystyna and Kowerski made good their escape from Hungary via the [[Balkans]] and [[Turkey]].
    15: ...andated [[Syria]] from the pro-[[Vichy]] [[France|French]] [[consul]]. Only German spies, some Polish...
  10. Leni Riefenstahl (8095 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Leni_Riefenstahl.jpg|frame|Riefenstahl circa 1930]]
    7: .... It is not documented that she would ever have a relationship with Hitler.
    13: ... World War II, she spent four years in a [[France|French]] [[detention camp]]. There were accusations ...
    21: ...loping new aesthetics in her films, especially in relation to nude bodies, and while the propaganda in her e...
    23: ... one" of the [[Roma people]] which had been drawn from a [[concentration camp]] to appear in her film ...
  11. Delia Gonzalez (2350 bytes)
    7: ...otably the two wins over [[Yolanda Gonzalez]] (no relation).
  12. Iris (plant) (13374 bytes)
    15: ...plant]]s with showy [[flower]]s ranging in colour from gold, copper-red or yellow to white, blue, blue...
    21: ... deserts of Europe, the Middle East and northern Africa, Asia and southern North America. Elevation is...
    23: ...e]]s (rhizomatous irises), or, in drier climates, from bulbs (bulbous irises). They have long, erect, ...
    25: ...aight outwards. The sepals and the petals differ from each other. They are united at their base into ...
    28: ...n the Northern Hemisphere) at irregular intervals from November to March, the bleakest period of the y...
  13. Testicle (6183 bytes)
    3: ...c muscle relaxes and the testicle is lowered away from the warm body and are able to cool. This phenom...
    5: ...olutionary development which protects each testis from hitting against the other.
    19: .... The tubes are lined with a layer of cells that, from [[puberty]] into old-age, produce sperm cells. ...
    28: Testicular size in relation to body weight varies widely. In the mammalian ki...
    30: ... normal adult human males, testicular size ranges from the lower end of around 14 cm? to the upper end...
  14. Human skeleton (3903 bytes)
    4: ...born with approximately 270. The difference comes from a number of small bones that fuse together duri...
    29: ...s while women tend to have larger pelvic bones in relation to body size. Women also tend to have narrower [...
    31: ...e [[Bible]] which states that [[Eve]] was created from one of [[Adam]]'s ribs. However, both men and w...
    35: ... can increase the likelihood of [[fracture (bone)|fracture]]s and broken bones, especially among [[men...
  15. Pulmonary alveolus (8193 bytes)
    16: ...o be transported between the alveoli and blood in relation to the water solubility of the gas the ability of...
    23: ... higher because carbon dioxide enters the alveoli from the pulmonary capillaries.
    60: ...degree that the patient cannot draw enough oxygen from his environment, then he may need supplemental ...
  16. Spleen (4479 bytes)
    1: ...d [[red blood cell]]s and removal of other debris from the bloodstream, and also in holding a reservo...
    3: It is an [[organ (anatomy)|organ]] derived from [[mesenchyme]] and lying in the [[mesentery]]. ...
    9: ...xertion. These animals also have large hearts in relation to their body size to accommodate the higher-visc...
    12: The word '''spleen''' comes from the [[Greek language|Greek]] ''splēn''.
    14: ...n) and ''[[melancholy]]'' (the temperament) comes from the [[The four humours|humoral medicine]] of th...
  17. Arm (7276 bytes)
    15: ...of the pectoralis major runs downward and outward from the inner half of the [[clavicle]]. The clavicu...
    21: ...e traced into its [[tendon]] of insertion, in the front of the elbow joint.
    25: ...pressed. The [[median nerve]] lies here, in close relation to the artery. At the bend of the elbow the two [...
    29: ... perform most daily tasks with a range of flexion from 30 degrees to 70 degrees. Secondly, the head of...
    33: ...ce of these two the median vein comes up from the front of the [[forearm]], while the two vertical lim...
  18. Flowering plant (29088 bytes)
    16: ...ling them to be correctly called [[Gymnosperm]]s. From that time onwards, so long as these Gymnosperms...
    18: ...d the position of Gymnosperms as a class distinct from Dicotyledons, and the term Angiosperm then grad...
    22: ...re not, however, primitive forms, but are derived from immediate land-ancestors. Associated with this ...
    24: ... the angiosperms and the [[Gnetophyte]]s diverged from one another during the late [[Triassic]] (220-2...
    27: ...ergone considerable revision as ideas about their relationships change. The [[Cronquist system]], proposed b...
  19. Music (16462 bytes)
    20: ...ere exist solo vocal and instrumental genres with free, improvisational rhythms with no regular pulse;...
    25: ...ltaneity succession]]); [[harmony]], which is the relationship between two or more pitches; [[counterpoint]]...
    38: ...lude a mixture of both, and performance may range from improvised solo playing for one's enjoyment to ...
    43: ... is produced as [[sheet music]]. To perform music from notation requires an understanding of both the ...
    49: ...nventions and even "fully composed" includes some freely chosen material. See also, [[precompositional...
  20. Society (6217 bytes)
    2: ... other groups by mutual interests, characteristic relationships, shared institutions and a common culture.
    8: ...], a ''society'' is defined as a [[network]] of [[relation]]ships between [[entity|entities]]. A ''society''...
    10: ...dly association with others." Societas is derived from ''socius'' meaning "companion" and thus the mea...
    15: ... and [[Post-Industrial]] societies to be separate from traditional agricultural societies.
    41: ...en known as societies (such as [[friendly society|friendly societies]] and [[building society|building...

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